From my experience on a transatlantic flight:
First they knock: knock, knock, we are landing sir. Me: OK.
Few minutes later: they knock more: knock, knock, knock, we are landing sir, you need to return to your seat. Me: I need 5 minutes.
Few minutes later: they bang on the door: bang, bang, bang, SIR, YOU NEED TO RETURN TO YOUR SEAT IMMEDIATELY!!!!!!!. Me: I’m almost done.
Few minutes later I open the door, get out and everybody in the plane starts staring at me and I’m like Hi 🙂
I landed sitting on the toilet on Tuesday in Atlanta from Amsterdam. Don’t eat smoked salmon on your flight. Ouch. I actually told the flight attendant that I couldn’t wait and she just told me to stay put until the plane stopped. I held on tight and honestly it wasn’t that bad aside from the cramps.
One of the steps of preparing the cabin for landing is checking that all passengers are seated and buckled up, no passengers are using the toilets and toilets are locked (it can be [un]locked from outside). The reasons behind checking the toilets for passengers during landings and takeoffs are related to both safety and security.
The safety related reasons are obvious, landings can be hard and you sitting in the toilet can be dangerous. Security related reasons are also obvious, the aircraft is closer to the land and most likely over a city, which make the sabotage plans have bigger effects.
Once they are sure you are simply doing nothing wrong, they won’t escalate it.
Remember, the cabin crew will deliver the message to the captain depending on the first impression they get, that impression can be a threat impression, or a a guy with bad stomach impression. The captain will react according to the first call since it is a landing which is considered a critical phase in the airlines business, the reaction can be as extreme as declaring an emergency landing, or as simple as "tell the guy to hang on to something".
Finally, the reaction will be different from one airline to another, country to another, crew to another. In some countries I would expect the reaction to be extreme in the name of security, while in some others (like in Asia) the crew might be more understanding. In any case, the crew are humans, and they do understand human needs.
They’ll open the door; all door locks can be operated outside, usually by flipping open the ‘occupied’ panel
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
5 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024